Navantia Awarded €160 contract for Wikinger Offshore Windfarm

One of the company's largest commissions to a Spanish supplier in the renewable energy industry

• The agreement enables Navantia's shipyards in Fene (A Coruña) and Puerto Real (Cádiz) to enter the offshore wind industry, one of the sectors with the brightest future prospects

• Fene has been awarded a €90-million contract to build part of the windfarm’s jacket foundations, whereas Puerto Real will deliver the metallic structures for the offshore substation, worth some €70 million

• The 350-megawatt (MW) Wikinger Offshore Windfarm project is located in German waters of the Baltic Sea

IBERDROLA and Navantia entered, today, into an agreement valued at €160 million, under the terms of which the shipbuilding firm will be completing work for the Wikinger Offshore Windfarm in Germany at its facilities in Puerto Real (Cádiz) and Fene (A Coruña).

The contract is one of the largest awarded to date by IBERDROLA to a Spanish supplier in the renewable energy industry, marking Navantia’s entry into the strategic offshore wind market.

Some 700 employees at Navantia are expected to be involved in this project over the next two years, guaranteeing the shipyards a significant workload during this period.

This award would also enable Navantia to participate in the procurement process for other offshore windfarm projects being developed by IBERDROLA.

According to the contracts signed today, Navantia's shipyard in Fene will be building 29 jacket foundations for the same number of wind turbines at the Wikinger facility. This agreement is worth a total of €90 million. Pile installation has been scheduled to begin in the first quarter of 2016, an operation that should be complete by the end of the summer of that year.

The Navantia shipyard in Puerto Real will be in charge of the construction and on-site installation of the offshore substation platforms. The award is worth €70 million and work is expected to run until the spring of 2016.

This steel structure will be about 60 m long and 22 m wide and it will consist of two platforms weighing over 4,800 tonnes. The base will be anchored to the seabed with six piles measuring over 50 m high and weighing 2,400 tonnes.

IBERDROLA's first offshore windfarm in Germany

With a total investment of almost €1.4 billion, Wikinger will have a significant economic impact through the entire supply chain. The Wikinger Offshore Windfarm is being developed by Iberdrola, off the coast of the island of Rügen where the water depth ranges between 37 and 43 metres.

The location covers an area of roughly 34 km2 where the company plans to install 70 wind turbines, each with a unit capacity of 5 MW, and an offshore substation featuring an innovative design by Iberdrola’s engineering and construction subsidiary.

The 350-megawatt (MW) wind farm will produce enough energy to meet the electricity needs of over 350,000 German households and avoid some 600,000 tonnes of CO2 emissions per year.

This new offshore installation is the first of its kind by IBERDROLA in Germany, as part of the Group's leading commitment to offshore wind power. On 30 October, the company opened its first offshore wind farm in the United Kingdom: West of Duddon Sands (389 MW), which will be supplying renewable electricity to some 280,000 British households.

By signing these contracts, IBERDROLA is reinforcing its commitment to Spain, where it invested €22 billion in 2001-2013 and where it expects to allocate an additional €1.5 billion by 2016. The company's overall tax bill amounted to €5.5 billion in 2013, of which 60% went towards the Spanish Exchequer.

The company has 11,500 employees in Spain and its purchases in the various regions where it operates are worth €2 billion per year to some 6,000 suppliers. IBERDROLA is therefore a crucial driving force in the economy of these territories and in fostering the internationalisation of its supplier firms. In fact, it allocated over €1.7 billion in recent years towards the purchase of products and services from hundreds of Spanish companies for its international projects.